Avinoam Yuval-Naeh is a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Haifa. He is the author of articles in The Journal of Early Modern History and Historia. This is his first book.
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Description
Introduction Part I. Usury Chapter 1. Jewish Usury, Jewish Historiography, and the Readmission Polemic of the 1650s Chapter 2. Usury and the Re-narration of the Ancient Israelite Society Chapter 3. English Ethnography and the Economy of the Jews Part II. Finance Chapter 4. Jews and the Financial Revolution Chapter 5. The 1753 Jewish Naturalization Bill and the Polemic over Public Credit Chapter 6. Jews, Finance, and Gender on the Stage and Beyond Chapter 7. Finance and the Eschaton Part III. Reform Chapter 8. Economic Crime and Criminal Economy Chapter 9. Jews and English Civil Society: Between Cumberland's The Jew and the Campaign for Emancipation Epilogue Notes Index Acknowledgments
"With erudition, clarity, and insight, An Economy of Strangers reveals how contemporaries used Jews, Judaism, and Jewish history to comprehend and evaluate the emergence of new commercial realities." (David Feldman, Birkbeck, University of London) "Avinoam Yuval-Naeh's thoroughly researched and compellingly written book brings together Jewish history and the financial revolution to show how contemporaries associated 'Jewish' characteristics with the changing values and practices of modern finance and capitalism." (Dana Rabin, author of Britain and Its Internal Others, 1750-1800: Under Rule of Law)